The socket length was tricky, I have short sockets and long sockets. Short was fine on all of the nuts except for the one under the fuel line. My long socket worked there until it was almost off then needed to switch to short.
Here's what I did.
Tools needed:
- 18" swivel head ratchet
- 14mm socket for the sway brackets (short and long, a 2" one might have come in handy)
- 17mm socket for endlink nuts
- 21mm socket for wheel nuts
- Jack and Jack stands
- Grease gun
- Marine grease
As everyone has mentioned, the stock swaybar is locked to the brackets. They do not rotate, and they work like a spring. They want to rotate up when no pressure is applied. If you remove the endlinks on both sides, the sway will rotate up, reducing your room to reach in. To make removing the stock sway easier, leave the endlinks attached while removing the brackets on the subframe. This holds the sway down.
An 18" or longer swivel head ratchet will get you on top of the bracket nuts and give the leverage necessary to get them off at about 5 degree turns. Work on the driver's side first, in case you get stuck and need to abort

a combination of socket lengths may be necessary to get the nut under the fuel line off. Passenger side is a breeze comparatively.
Once the brackets are removed, unbolt the sway from the top of the endlinks on each side (I used my stock endlinks while waiting on the rear whiteline endlinks). Pull the sway out from the passenger side.
Apply some marine grease to the inside of the bushings. Open the bushings for the Eibach bar and slip over the sway bar, on the outside of the stops. It’s hard to get the grease gun on and off the nipples once the bar is installed, temporarily put the bracket over the bushings on each side and pump em full of grease. Eibach sway is still off the car.
Insert the bar from the passenger side of the car. The sway will rotate freely in the bushings. So rotate them down out of the way and lightly attach the nuts on the brackets. This will be a little trickier because of the "walls" on the brackets, makes it hard to get a socket onto them, I used a u-joint as a mini ratchet to get them finger tight by flipping the u-joint over, turning, flipping, turning.
The brackets have slots (they’re generic) so to make them evenly positioned, slide both of them all the way towards the front or rear of the car to make sure they’re aligned then tighten down with the 18" ratchet. Top up with grease. Attach the endlinks and hit the curves.
The rear sway alone, on soft, removed that floaty vagueness that has been bugging me. Car transitions through s-turns much better with less rolling. Car feels now like stock should feel like. I’m convinced that the locked OEM sway bar was pushing on the suspension through g-bumps which is what made the ass end feel like it was going to float away. The additional stiffness of the Eibach simply takes the roll out of the back end. 2 birds with one stone. I think everyone should definitely do this, you don’t know what you’re missing.
Looking forward to getting my springs and front sway. The rear is worth doing on its own, but I’m looking forward to a quicker turn in and less pitching and diving.